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Infrared Microscopy As A Failure Analysis Tool In The Thermal Inkjet Cartridge Industry

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 July 2020

Mary Widmark Tungol*
Affiliation:
Analytical Services Laboratory, Inkjet Supplies Business Unit, Hewlett-Packard, Corvallis, Oregon97330, USA
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Extract

Four major components comprise an inkjet cartridge (Fig.lA): (1) the pen body which contains the ink and positions the cartridge in the printer; (2) an ink delivery system which supplies ink at the correct backpressure and flow rate; (3) a flex circuit which provides the electrical interconnect to the printer; and (4) the printhead which generates and directs the drops. Because of its complexity and small critical dimensions, the printhead poses the greatest analytical challenge for many failure analysis problems. Each printhead may contain as many as 300 firing chambers (Fig. IB). Each chamber consists of a resistor surrounded by a polymer-based barrier material which forms a cavity into which ink flows from the ink delivery system. The chamber is capped by a metal or polymer orifice-containing plate. Printing occurs when the resistor is heated to form an ink vapor bubble which subsequently ejects a droplet of ink though the orifice onto the paper.

Type
Optical Microanalysis Via Molecular Spectroscopy
Copyright
Copyright © Microscopy Society of America

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